October 24, 2014 | 10:20 - 11:50

Integrating Ecosystem Conservation with Agricultural Production: Session at the National Workshop on Large Landscape Conservation

Ronald Reagan Building, Washington, DC

Including agriculture in large landscape conservation

Innovators around the world have begun to articulate a new and compelling vision for adaptive, resilient land management to meet the multiple goals of the twenty-first century — global food and energy security, economic development, biodiversity, water security, resilient ecosystems and solutions to climate change. In the U.S., Solutions from the Land (SfL), has begun a nation-wide collaboration and dialogue on land management. With active participation and input from nearly two hundred agricultural, forestry, conservation, business, academic and government leaders, SfL in March 2013 released a groundbreaking Pathways Report which underscored the need for land, water, and other natural resources to be managed both in an integrated manner and at the scale necessary for its vision to be realized. The report identified a number of near-term and long-term actions needed to support and accelerate the delivery of multiple solutions to the mega-challenges facing our nation and the world and spotlighted examples where innovative practices and land management approaches are taking place all across America.

Internationally, the Landscapes for People, Food and Nature Initiative was launched in 2011, as a partnership to support and promote scaling of multi-objective landscapes around the world. Led by leading international agriculture and agricultural development organization, collaborative work is underway on knowledge-sharing, policy, finance, business engagement and research. Continental inventories underway by the partners have already identified more than 300 such initiatives in Latin America and more than 150 in Africa, that are seeking to increase agricultural production while at the same time meeting other needs from the land.

This session will feature summaries of lessons learned so far from the analysis and experiences of SfL and LPFN case studies of multi-stakeholder led, integrated landscape initiatives and suggested pathways for the replication and scaling up of these efforts.

Event Details

Speakers

Ernie Shea

Lessons learned from the Solutions from the Land Dialogue

Ernie Shea is Project Coordinator of the Solutions from the Land Dialogue.

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Seth Shames

Landscapes for People, Food and Nature

Seth Shames is Director, Public Policy and Landscape Finance, at EcoAgriculture Partners.

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Marcus Maier

Protecting Water with On-farm Conservation: The Indian Creek Watershed Project

Marcus Maier is Chairman of the Livingston County (Illinois, USA) Soil and Water Conservation District.

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Pat O'Toole

Public-Private Conservation Efforts in the Little Snake River Basin, Wyoming, USA

Pat O’Toole is President of the Family Farm Alliance.

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Kate Hackett

Turning Profit into Reforestation: Delaware Wild Lands’ Atlantic White Cedar Restoration

Kate Hackett is Executive Director of Delaware Wild Lands.

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